prejudice
Asian and Black Doctors Most Likely to Face Prejudice From Their Own Patients
Black and Asian healthcare professionals in the United States are more likely to face prejudice and hear offensive language from their own patients than their White counterparts, a recent study revealed.
Almost 1,200 doctors and other healthcare professionals and over 1,000 patients participated in the survey, “Patient Prejudice: When Credentials Aren’t Enough“.
Southeast Asians in Pennsylvania Don’t Think Donald Trump Does Enough to Stop Racism
The Hampden Township Police Department in Pennsylvania held a meeting earlier in April after Asian Indians in the community expressed concern about recent hate crimes happening around the country.
“First there was a shooting in Kansas City, then there was another shooting in South Carolina,” Deep Gupta, chairman of the Asian Indian Americans of Central Pennsylvania, told ABC27 News. “The third one in Seattle.”
She Was Biased Towards a Particular Race, Then She Took a DNA Test and Broke Down
In a recent case study, Travel company Momondo took 67 people from various ethnicities and offered them a DNA test.
All participants had one thing in common: They were particularly proud of their ethnicity and where they came from. However, they were also biased towards certain people of a particular race.